Do you have acro's? I'm very convinced that TIN levels of at least 18 will affect acro's, but levels over 100 didn't appear to affect my LPS, monti's or gorgonians (although I only have a few of these compared to 50+ acros). Here are my levels over the past 6 months .... (NEW tank set up 11 mo ago). I finally got my tin level down to an acceptable level (4.47 as of 2 weeks ago) after getting rid of the Red Sea "green tubing", the new Red Sea skimmer, and a piece of new PVC pipe I used as a temporary drain when I removed the Red Sea sched 80 drain:I definitely think that this may be the case. We started up our tank in February of this year. It was a new @Waterbox Aquariums 220.6. We started doing ICP tests through Triton starting in February because I wanted to make sure we documented regularly and with the same company. We have basically been doing a 32g water change weekly. Here are our Tin values over this past year. One thing to note... Our corals and fish are doing great and we haven't really seen any adverse effects (that we know of) so far.
2/2020 3/2020 5/2020 6/2020 8/2020 9/2020 10/2020 11/2020 5.259 15 7.098 5.512 5.624 5.476 9.555 8.407
5/11/20 Triton | 6/1/20 Triton | 6/1/20 ATI | 6/27/20 Triton | 8/13/20 ATI | 9/15 ATI | 10/6/20 ATI | 10/19/20 OCEAMO | 11/4/20 ATI | 11/17/20 Triton |
18 | 22 | 45.84 (0.47) | 18 (0.1) | 114.2 (0.48) | 122.0 (0.48) | 87.27 (0.50) | 14.2 (<1) | 49.97 (0.50) | 4.472 (0.1) |
I can't find the quote right now, but I'm fairly sure that it was AquaForest that wrote that Tin levels over 10 can be detrimental to corals.
I am still negotiating with Red Sea so can't say everything I would like to say at this point, but I will mention that one of their "rebuttals" was that tin leaching from plastic will dissipate over 3 months. I clearly proved this to be a false statement. There were many items I tested after being in use for over 9 months that still showed dangerously high levels of tin, including the "green tubing" that showed a level of 1400 after 8 months of use.
Red Sea is also claiming that only 10% of measured tin is toxic and only 40% of a tube or pipe makes contact with water, so they are trying to say all my values should be reduced by these amounts. Of course they didn't consider that simply soaking tubing or pipes with no flow as I did would result in lower numbers than if I had a pump pushing water through them as happens in "real life"! (I have a battle on my hands!)